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News (Media Awareness Project) - US CO: Edu: Colorado Lab Creates Cancer-Fighting Pot Plant
Title:US CO: Edu: Colorado Lab Creates Cancer-Fighting Pot Plant
Published On:2011-10-19
Source:Rocky Mountain Collegian, The (Colorado State U, CO Edu)
Fetched On:2011-10-23 06:04:00
COLORADO LAB CREATES CANCER-FIGHTING POT PLANT

Marijuana Opponents Say Drug Needs FDA Approval

Cannabis Science Inc., a Colorado-based medicinal marijuana biotech
company that develops pharmaceutical cannabis products, has developed
a formula it said can treat cancer.

Earlier this month, the company announced plans for the drug to go
into circulation by the end of October. It will be released first in
two unspecified Colorado cities. Colorado will be the only state thus
far to administer the drug to patients, though the company hopes to
expand worldwide.

"We are a global company with a global solution to a global problem,"
said Cannabis Sciences' Investment Relations Manager Robert Kane.

The drug works by utilizing the tumor killing properties of ceratin
compounds found in marijuana, and its ability to inhibit growth in a
variety of cancers.

Kane said he would, "love to see people benefit from (cannabis)
cancer medicines enough to enough to get FDA approval," adding that,
once the success of the medication is seen in Colorado, he expects to
see if being used in other states and countries.

"People should have this as an option," Kane stated, noting the
importance of a viable alternative to the medications offered by the
present system.

Former Fort Collins Mayor and Executive Board Member of Concerned
Citizens of Fort Collins Ray Martinez said efforts to get the drug
FDA approved are being done all wrong.

"The FDA needs to monitor the process," Martinez said.

Hannah Getzen, a junior music therapy major, said she felt something
that could in any way improve the quality of a cancer patient's life
should absolutely be pursued. "If you gave it [the drug] a generic
name, and it wasn't called marijuana, people wouldn't hesitate to
support it." Getzen said.

However, according to Laura Kriho, president of the Cannabis Therapy
Institute, marijuana and cannabis-related medications should be
available to everyone.

"Never has a medication treated so many conditions so effectively," Kriho said.

Kriho said that since the 30's, pharmaceutical companies have been,
at least in part, responsible for the prohibition of marijuana,
saying that the sale of such drugs would interfere the sale of
similar pharmaceutical medications.

But according to Martinez, dispensaries are more concerned with
making money than treating patients, using the recent unionization
between local dispensaries and the food industry union in Denver as an example.

Martinez said he supports the use of any drug, as long as it
undergoes the scrutiny of the FDA.

"Some people really do need it," Martinez said. "But I want to see it
done through the FDA."

Martinez added that testing of medicinal marijuana by the FDA would
allow doctors to inform patients of any dangers and hazards involved.

"As of now," Martinez said. "No research has been conducted."
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